Jiasaz company for IT services
Overall Review Rating
4.2 (7 Ratings)
Overview
JIASAZ is an IT solutions and Services provider for their customers throughout the world. with inception in 2014, Jiasaz is headquartered in Erbil-Iraq, having exceptional and comprehensive experience in complex software systems, websites and network administration and installation and committed to quality and spirit to innovate and serve over 30 clients across Kurdistan Region.
Services
- Advertising, Media
- iOS App Development
- Digital Strategy
- Crypto Exchange Development
- Web Development
- Content Management System
- Android App Development
- MySQL
- Agile Coaching
- E-commerce Development
- Cross Platform Development
- Mobile App Development
Industries Served
Jiasaz company for IT services Reviews
Have a look at these client reviews on previously delivered projects.
Elliot Thorne
Managing Director, Technology - Redwood Capital AdvisorsThe redesign made our product feel like a different company built it. In a good way.
We have worked with a few agencies over the years and the comparison is honestly not close. What stood out from the start was that they spent serious time understanding the problem before they proposed anything. Once development started, every sprint review was clean — no hidden surprises, no slipped milestones. The production system has been running for four months without a single critical issue. Our internal developers reviewed the codebase at handover and were genuinely complimentary about the quality. That does not happen often.
Project summary
Supply chain disruptions had made demand forecasting critical. Our planning team was working off data that was always two weeks out of date.
Nisha Pillai
Director of Engineering - GrowthBridge VenturesFinally — ML that our operations team actually uses rather than ignores
The technical quality is the obvious thing to highlight. The automated test suite is comprehensive, the deployment pipeline is solid, and the documentation is actually useful rather than written to satisfy a checklist. But the metric I keep coming back to is what has NOT happened since go-live. No 2am incident calls. No emergency patches. No post-launch retrospectives about what went wrong. For a system of this complexity, that outcome is exactly what we paid for.
Project summary
Our client portal had not been updated since 2018. Prospects were mentioning competitor portals in pitches. We could not keep deferring the investment.
Cameron Aldrich
Head of Digital Operations - Northstar Logistics CorpPurpose-built platform that made our competitors' off-the-shelf tools look outdated
The knowledge transfer at the end of the project was notably good. Too many vendors see handover as a tick-box exercise. This team ran structured sessions, produced documentation our internal team actually references, and spent real time making sure we understood the architecture decisions well enough to maintain and extend the system independently. Six months later we are doing exactly that without needing to go back to them for every question.
Project summary
The business case had been approved but the internal resource to execute it had not materialised. External delivery was the pragmatic solution.
Clémentine Aubert
Head of Digital Products - Arc-en-Ciel Digital SASA vendor that earned a place on our preferred supplier list through delivery, not sales
Our stakeholder group was unusually broad — board sponsors, operational users, compliance leads, and an IT team with strong opinions. I have watched vendors handle that kind of environment badly. This team adjusted how they communicated depending on who they were talking to, managed expectations honestly when things shifted, and delivered something that each group considers a success. Getting everyone to agree on that outcome was not straightforward and they deserve credit for making it happen.
Project summary
The project had a board-level visibility date. We needed a partner who would treat the deadline as their own.
Siobhan Gallagher
Chief Technology Officer - Northumbria FinTech LtdDelivered what the proposal described. More rare than it should be.
We received proposals from six vendors. Four of them quoted us prices that bore no relationship to the actual scope. This team came back with something realistic and then delivered against it exactly. I have worked on enough technology projects to know that the gap between what is proposed and what is delivered is where trust gets destroyed. There was no gap here. What was promised is what we got, and the ongoing relationship we have built from this is something we intend to continue.
Project summary
A failed engagement the previous year had made us more rigorous about vendor selection. We took the time to find a partner we actually trusted before we committed.